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A04390 Englands iubilee, or Irelands ioyes Io-pæan, for King Charles his welcome With the blessings of Great-Britaine, her dangers, deliuerances, dignities from God, and duties to God, pressed and expressed. More particularly, Irelands triumphals, with the congratulations of the English plantations, for the preseruation of their mother England, solemnized by publike sermons. In which 1. The mirrour of Gods free grace, 2. The mappe of our ingratitude, 3. The meanes and motiues to blesse God for his blessings. 4. The platforme of holy praises are doctrinally explained, and vsefully applyed, to this secure and licentious age. By Stephen Ierome, domesticke chaplaine to the Right Honourable Earle of Corke.; Irelands jubilee Jerome, Stephen, fl. 1604-1650. 1625 (1625) STC 14511.5; ESTC S103354 215,774 330

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Ambrose David here and his people their holy hymnes gratulatorie prayses Iö Paeans as our plantations this day to the glory of the God of glorie the giver of all grace And sure if ever I saw heaven upon earth it is when a religious Pastor and a zealous people are assembled together in Gods house upon the Lords Sabaoths or a religious familie as a private or pettie Church hearing and preaching the word as in Pauls time continued the whole r Act 20 7 day expounding Scriptures as in Ezras ſ Neh 8.5.6 7 8 time in publicke prayers early in the morning as in Tertullians dayes and the Primitive t Pliny the Iunior testifies so much of them in epistle to Traian apologizing for Christians times in some places and Churches in our times singing of Psalmes as our Saviour with his Disciples at his last Supper Oh sure here is an Image indeed of heaven here is in some parts of Gods worship vita coelestis vita celitum the life of the Saints in earth and in heaven here is Bethell Gods owne w Gen. 35 7 house the place is holy x Exod 3 5 ground God himselfe here is present u Marke 14 26 walking in the middest of the y Revel 2.1 golden Candelstickes as he was with Sydrach Mysaach and z Dan. 3.24.25 Abelenago singing in the Babylonian flames and with these joyfull Saints Saunders a Apud Foxum in Mart. ●ilogi● Gl●ver and others who rejoyced and triumphed in the middest of that Romish Babylonian flames in which the Martyres were tortured in Queene Maryes dayes here Christ himselfe is present and president too as hee was with his Disciples after his b Luke 24. Resurrection and Ascension in the dayes of c Act. 2.1.2.3 Pentecost according to his promise Whether there be naturall Musicke in nerves arteries and sinewes the simularie or dissimularie parts of the bodie of d Opinio Heripinli Medici Albere● Durer● Tyurdei l 2. Musices vide Tolosaeuum Syntax ar●is Mirabil● l. 12 c. 8 pag 189 man or whether elementarie musicke in the elements as e In Tymeo in Platonem Marsil Ficinus Plato f In sonno Scip. Macrob. in Ciceronem lib 2. c. 1 Tully Matrobius thought or whether celestiall and heavenly musicke in the Spheares as Py●hagoras first g Apud Athen. lib. 14. cap 14. imagined and to which manie learned men since in all ages have in some h Vt inter Philosophos Plat. li. 10. Reip. pa. 670. Macrob. lib. 2. de somn Scip. c. 3. p. 90. Plutarch de musica tom 2 pa. 707. Inter Poetas Aristoph in nubibus act 1. scan 3. pa 169. Virgil. Aeneid pag 167 Manilius l. 1. pa. 25. Iuter Theologes Anselm demundi magine ca. 24. tom 3. pag. 300. Beda de musica practicit tom 1. p. 417. Ma●imus T●ius serm 21. p. 256. ser 23. pag. 280. sense subscribed though by others contradicted others disputed others doubted these musicall controversies to me are not much materiall Here is that musicke which as David said of Goliahs sword 1) 1. Sam. 21.9 ther 's none like unto it Here is the musicke of musickes as Salomons Canticles are called the song of songs to which the Quier of heaven joynes with the Chorus of Saints in earth At this the Angels rejoyce 2) Luke 15 vers 10. as at tht conversion of sinners With this God himselfe is delighted his spirit ravished refreshed more then ever Alexander or any other was wrought upon by modulations of anie earthly man Where on the contrarie to make application to our owne times if ever I saw the verie image and picture of hell it is when a carelesse Emperick of Soules a doltish Sir Iohn-lack Latin a blinde Pholypheme a profane Esau one of Ieroboams priests 3) 1. King 12. vers 31. is placed over a people of Sodom 4) Isay 1. v. 10. as a Wolfe over goats whereupon Gods owne Saboths which should be consecrated as glorious daies to the Lord 5) Ier. 17.27 are perverted profaned rather to the service of Bacchus Priapus and Venus as once the heathenish Floralia Bacchanalia c. that the Devill should so rule and raigne in the popish or profane parish keepe such a rackett as the chiefe steward both with Pastor people that neyther barrell being better Hering in stead of preaching there should be pyping or idle prating playing as the Israelitish wantons once with the Moabitish women Numb 25. in stead of Devotion dauncing in stead of singing of Psalmes discharging of oathes like vollies of shott and roarings of Canons with full foole foule mouthes even in the very face of the Almightie Oh the difference betwixt Davids dayes and ours those Ioviall Saturnall golden dayes in which he lived and our Iron irefull times Davids people had they acted such publicke parts of Gods prayses in our dayes worshipped God so seriously so solemnely so sincerly now they had beene counted and called Puritans Precisians every mothers sonne of them many an i Gen. 21.9 Ismalite would have scoft them manie a k 2. Sam. 20.6 Micholl mockt them yea had but part of this Congregation assembled in the night as the persecuted Christians were sometimes occasioned for their securitie and the Disciples after Christs l Acts 12. v. 12 Ascension had there beene any religious m Chiefly a Damosell Rhoda as Act. 12.13 Shee would be counted called too an ●●rodias women amongst them though Mary Magdalens Salomees or Susanas they should all have beene taxed and traduced to have beene of the Family of love or lust Adamits or Anabaptists they had beene censured everie one their devotions had been turned on the tipp of malignant tongues into promiscuous daunces they had escaped no better then the Primitive Christians or then the sincerest in those dayes at least they had beene counted more precife then wise more hypocriticall then holy thus publicke to prayse and worship God which they might have done well enough in private without this Heraulding and Trumpetting Gods prayse and in his their owne perhaps they had not escaped the imputations which Festus gave unto m Acts 26.24 Paul and n 2. King 9.11 Iehues consort Captaines to the annoynting Prophets even of mad men SECT VIII Davids times and ours further ballanced inrespect of multitudes then Religious now Irreligious THus David and his people were as in a plurifie or burning feaver of zeale carried up as o 2. King 2.11 Elias as in a fiery Chariot we are now in a cold palsie frozen as Esops snake yea as p De frigiditate Salamandri Discorides lib. 2. c. 5. Galenus de Temper lib. 3. cap. 4. Et Aug. de Civit. Dei lib. 21. cap. 4. Salamanders not to be heated extinguishing all sparkes and fires that are put in us by good motions from God or put to us by good motives from man
snowes in Summer or in Harvest raine Or as some pardons executions done Apologize it 's well thou camest thus * Est aliquid prodire tenus si non detur ultra soone Since all that Time which lent thee speaking breath Thou staidst for presse well nie till prest to death Yet lame a 2. Sam. 16.3.4 chap. 18. vers 24.25.26 Mephibosheth thou bringst a heart Better then Ziba though he act first part Say more how Tyme so clipt swift Fames flig wing That till Novembers fift she scarse did bring Those gladding newes to our Hibernian coast Of Charles returne which we desired most So oft our trusts were voyd so guld our Ioyes By flying Lying Fictions Newes Tales Toyes So fluctuate we were twixt Hopes and Feares As feathers pendent in the windes and ayres That Hearing truths by common votes shoutes cryes We scarse durst trust our eares without our eyes For even when Prince was come Plebean crew Vox populi cries still too good for true But when trueths Trumpe by vulgar breathes was blowne Our Ioyes reviv'd as out of Feares dead sowne As when hot Phoebus gleames to life doth bring Hymens dead seeming b Sylphae Culex Scarabei Cicada cancri saepin● mori reviviscere censentur ab Aristot anim lib. 8. c. 17. Idem affirmat Vincent de Pulicibus lib. 20 ca. 151. Idem Isidor lib. 12. cap. 8. Aelian lib. 2. ca. 29. De Muscis alij de alijs infectis infects Batts in spring Our Sunne reshines from that eclypsing cloud Of doubts and dangers which her lightes did shrewd As out of fearefull dreames in which she slept Our Irish Muse wakes laughes who earst had wept In Cyntheas circuite Circle of one Moone Mournefull Melpomine mirthfull is become And now as nimble Corybant she praunceth In our Ioyes Iubilees she friskes Trips daunceth That anchored in her Port she safe doth rest Fre'd from windes waves of doubts which tost her brest And with a foote as swift as Pegassus To mother Albions coast to scattered us Swarmes from her Hive whom Tyme Hibernifieth Live King Live Prince our glad Thalia crieth Let after ages Caesar Charles enroule Their names Fames facts Fates in eternall scroule That in their Nestors yeares desired dayes Our poore Plantations may their hopes helps rayse Whose Times expir'd above the Planets Seaven As they plant us great Iove plant them in Heaven IRELANDES IVBILEE OR IOYES IO PAEAN 1. Chron. Chap. 29. Vers 20.21.22 20 And David sayd to all the Congregation Now blesse the Lord your God And all the Congregation blessed the Lord God of their fathers and bowed downe their heads and worshipped the Lord and the King 21 And they sacrificed sacrifices unto the Lord and offered burnt offrings unto the Lord on the morrow after that day even a thousand Bullockes a thousand Rams and a thousand Lambs with their drinke offrings and sacrifices in abundance for all Israel 22 And d●d eate and drinke before the Lord on that day with great gladnesse and they made Salomon the sonne of David King the second time and annoynted him unto the Lord to be the chiefe Governour and Zadok to be Priest SECTIO I. The Preface or Prologomena to the whole AS we have heard by true certaine and infallible report the newes of the Prince his arrivall which we most delighted most desired to heare of all others in which before time we were wonderously devided and distracted betwixt hopes and feares as a Ship driven too and fro with contrary windes and waves by reason of the uncertainty of rumors and flying lying a Fama malum quo non velocius ullum fame every man speaking as he would have it rather then as the truth was as they were well affected or infected demonstrating themselves as the Damosell told Peter their very tongues bewraying them b Mark 14.17 as Shibboleth Sibboleth distinguished betwixt Ephramites and Gileadites c Iudg c. 12.5.6 as the proverbe is As the man is thinking so is the Bell still ringing As now I say it is certainely writ and fixt on the columnes of truth that the Prince is prosperously and safely in the outward and inward man arrived out of Spain to the English Court of which we have so many testimonies from such a cloud of eye eare d Oculati au riculares testes witnesses as the Apostles and Disciples had to the exhilerating of their formerly sadded e Math. 27. v. 7.8.9 Mark 16. v. 1.2.6.7 Luk. 24.36.41 hearts of the resurrection of their Saviour he now being more incredulous then that Didymus f Iohn 20 v. 25. which will not beleeve his eare in that which is vox populi without the sight of his owne eye So as we already have solemnized his arrivall with our heartiest gratulations we are here againe assembled to resolemnize it and to renue our commemorations by the addition of another succeeding exceeding mercie the mercifull marvailous and miraculous protection and preservation of our Soveraigne King our now Illustrious Prince our Noble Peeres the reverent Prelats the Gentrie the Cleargie the Commonaltie the whole body of the Kingdome our lives our wives our Children together with the Gospell and Religion who all at one blowe had perished g We had lost rem Regem gregem legem Regimen Religionem in the Powder Treason had that fatall blowe beene given that was intended which blowe the Lord Protector of great Brittaine the Watchman Centinell Shepheard of * Psal 35. v. 1. our English Israel prevented by putting a manacle on the bloudy Traytors hand by a speciall and peculiar providence even in an instant as once a hooke in the nosthrils of Sannacharib h 2. Kings 19.28 in the like exigent a halter about the necke of Haman i Esth. 7. v. 9. a gagg and a boult on the tongue of Balaam k Numb 23. ve 7.8 a moussell on the mouth of Tobiah and Shanballat l Neh. 6.14 a dart from heaven into the bowels of the Apostate Iulian h In his warre with Sapor the Persian King wounded with an arrow from heavē he threw his bloud into the aire crying vicisti Galilee vicisti Thou hast overcome ô Galilean apud histor tripartit when they in their damnable resolutions intended mischiefe to the Church and people of God To teach all the proud pestilent and perverse spirits of the world what it is to kick against the pricke n Act 9. v. 5. swim against the streame for flesh and bloud to contend against God o 1 Cor. 10.22 who sitting in the heavens knowes in a trice how to confound them and their devices to crush their Cockatrice egges to sweepe down their Spiders webs to breake them as a potters vessel p Psal 29. as easily as a brasen head breakes in fitters a head of glasse q Impar congressus apud Al ciatum in suis Emblem all their Counsels plots projects and
conspiracies perishing as an Embrio withering as the grasse on the house topp dissolving as the waxe before the fire r Ps 58 6.7.8 as the snow before the Sunne and scattering as the dust and chaffe before the winde ſ Psal 1.4 There being neyther power nor strength against the Almightie who can turne even the wisedome of a Friarly and Iesuited Achitophell t 2. Sam. 15.31 into folly and the curses of the great Balaam of Rome against his Christian Sion v Numb 23.20 into blessings he that rules in heaven w Psal 2.4 laughing all the enemies of himselfe and his Church to scorne the holy one of Israel as appeares in the experience of this day having them in derision It being as probable as possible for that Antichristian man of Rome according to his projects and the Thrasonicall bragges of his Canonists and Gnatonicall claw-backes to depose Kings dispose kingdomes x The Pope Sycophants make him beleeve that hee may deponere Reges as Iehoida did Achaliae and disponere regna as whē he proudly deposed King Papin of France with Petrae dedit Petro Petrus Diadema Rodulpho with such pranks as these unlesse the Lord first depose them as he did Saul y 1. Sam. 15.26 Balthazar z Dan 5 26. and Nabuchadnezar a Dan 4.34 using him as he did Tamberlaine and Ashur b Esai 10. v. 5. and now the Turke as the rod of his wrath as the Iudge and the Shiriffe may use a hangman to execute follons as God himselfe hath used the Divell to torment the first King of Israel c 1 Sam. 16.14 I say unlesse God let loose his chained mastives whether Turke or Pope to the punishing the sinnes of the King or of a Kingdome all their attempts against the Lords annoynted are but to fight against God as the Centaures the old Gyants in the fable were said to wage warre against Iupiter d Apud Lucianū in Dialogis They may aswell endevour to turne the Sea to dry land to turne Iordan backward e Vt olim Elisha 2. King 2. v. 14. to plucke the Sunne out of the firmament yea God himselfe out of heaven as to pull any Christian King Gods Lieutenant and Vice-gerent of Gods setting and planting out of his throne unlesse they have as the Divell sometimes hath but the Pope never had a speciall commission or permission from God as a tryall of a righteous Prince or the punishment of the reprobate Oh well may Traytors like them undoe themselves by their doings as did Absalon f 2. Sam. 18.14 Adoniah g 1. Kings 2.25 A●halia h 2. King 11. v. 1.14.15 Sheba i 2. Sam. 20. v. 22. the Romane Cateline k Apud Salust Seianus l Apud Plutarchum the French m See both their tragedies polished in our English tongue B●ron Lopus Ravillack the Belgicke B●rnwell our English Squire Parry Babington the Romish Garnet Campian and these unfortunate English Gentlemen as their owne call them Digby Catesby Winter Faux bringing as did Ioab the bloud upon their owne head which they thought to shed from others falling into that pit which they digge for others n Nec lex aequior ulla est quam necis artifices arte perire sua scorching themselves like the fond Flea Pyrausta o De Pirausta vel Pyrali vel Pyrogono Plin. libr. 11. nat hist c. 36. Aelian lib. 2. cap. 2. at those flames they thought to quench shooting like him that shootes up at the Sunne arrowes to fall on their owne pates the wild-fire balles of their treasons as cast against an Iron wall rebounding backe againe upon themselves to their breaking or burning as he that gripes thornes or the prickling Vrchin or the edge of a sharpned steele pricks his owne fingers and bloods himselfe but hurts no man else Themselves comming to their immature and unglorious ends like Haman cum cede sanguine as is usually seene with that bloud and slaughter upon their owne nocent heads which they intended against the innocents and innocuous like the inuentor of Perillus his Bull first hanzelling and acting in that tyrannie which their treachery intended and invented against others So let thy enemies perish ô Lord p Iudg. 5. v. 31. so let them perish that rise up against thee and against thine annoynted that draw the sword of warre as did Ioab against Abner q 2. Sa. 3.27.28 and Amasa r 2. Sa. 2.20.10 in the time of peace Let them perish with the sword that strike unlawfully with the sword ſ Math. 26.52 if any rebell against God and Cesar let him be Anathema Maranatha execrable accursed let him die ungloriously t Ier. 22. v. 24.28 like Iechonia let none say Alas my brother as the old Prophet did for the young v 1. King 13.30 let his name here stinke as a Fox or a Poulcat or a Carrion after rott with his carkas buried in the Leth of oblivion let him like w 1. King 21.20 Ahab x 1. King 16.26 Ieroboam y Gen. 4.14.15 Caine Balaam z Iohn 17. v. 12. Iudas and our English Banister a Servant to the Duke of Buckingham trecherously betraying his distressed Lord to Richard the 3. Speed Hollinshed in Chronicis never be remembred but with some brand marke of obloquie some addition of infamie Let his wife be a widdow as David sings of his and Christs enemies prophetically his children vagabounds b Psalm 22. his seede fatherlesse c Iudg. 8.7 and his house desolate yea let them perish like smoake and the untimely fruite of a woman Let them be like Zeba and Zalmunna and them of Penuell whose flesh Gideon tore with the bryers of the wildernesse or as the ungratefull Ammonites d 2. Sam. 10.19 whom David brought under with Iron Sawes as Pharaoh and his Egyptians that were drowned in the redd Sea e Exo. 14.25.26 as Iabin and the hoste of Sisera f Iudg. 5.21 whom the river Kyshon swept away yea that auncient river the river Kyshon But let them that love and feare thee say alwayes as we this day The Lord be praysed Praysed be the Lord out of Sion which dwelleth at Ierusalem And sure the concurrence of these two extraordinary mercies the reflecting on the one as by past his Majesties preservation the present fruition of the other the generally welcommed reduction of our Illustrious Prince kept safe by that Bonus Genius or good Angel who went along with him as once with Iacob a Gen. 28. v. 16 48.26 with Abrahams Steward b Gen. 24.7 and that Apocryphall Tobiah and those Easterne Magi c Matth. 2.9 Bosquier in his Eccho concionū disputes that the starre was some good Angel but concludes that it was stella de novo creata in all incident perils by Sea and by Land in the Spanish expedition
in their learned Treatises de Antichristo proved they must doe little in tēporall things in spirituall things nothing without their light ayme from Peters pretended usurping successor to whom they are in submission and subjection as a wife to her husband as a childe to his Father as a pupill to his tutor as a schoole-boy foole-boy yea I say further as a servant or prentice to his Master or which is yet more servile as a Warde to his Guardian or a Captive to his Conquerour without whose placet they must eyther sit still or rise and fall Such a yoake of Romish bondage by their owne grosse superstition with which they are both blinded and bewitched have Christian Princes layd upon their owne neckes more intollerable then ever those Aegyptian Moabitish Midianitish Cananitish Caldean and Babylonian yoakes which for their sinnes or trials the Lord successively layd on the necke of that untamed c Deut. 32.15 Heyffer Iesurun rebellious Israel David was wiser then thus he was not as seduced Israel as a Dove without a heart he sends not to Rome for either leave or light though leave be light to manage what belongs either to his Civill or Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction as the Councell of Trent that could not proceede in anie of their superstitious blasphemous conclusions without posting and reposting to fetch the holy Ghost from d See the book in folio called the Councell of Trent set out by the well deserving paines perils too of M. Breut Rome as a Bee in a boxe as the jest was who came at last and frighted in the forme of a black dogge one of their chiefe e agents out of his wits Or if David had inquired for a Pope in his dayes unlesse he had found out the Pagan * Annius Rex hominū Phoebique Sacerdos Virgil. Pontifex or some high Priest amongst the Iewes hee might as well have sought for a man in the Moone with a bush of thornes on his backe or for a Needle which had beene needlesse in a bottle of Hay for we cannot say as Polycarpus said of Marcion that the Pope was the first begotten sonne of the * Novi te primogenuū Sat●anae Devill nay as they speake of some Toades or Serpents that breede in the braynes and f Plin. li. 10 hist c. 66. Isidor c. 4. et Aelian li. 2. c. 53. marrowes of dead men hee was hatcht since by the warmth of that cockatrice the Devill in the poysoned corrupted braines of men living or rather as it 's said of Gnats Insects that breed of bloud dung g Cardinal Cres●ence writing letters to the Pope March 25 was affrighted by the Devill in forme of a blacke Dogge Sle●da● Coment 23. He died at Verona See G●uiar● french history translated pag. 197. g Vt Scarabens in pila ex fimo facto masculum gignit Aelian li. 9. ca. 16. Aug. de morib Manic c. 17. retract 2. cap. 7. putrifaction bloud was his first breeding as since feeding for from the bloud of Mauritius the Emperour unjustly effused by that trecherous Phocas some gnats of a stinging conscience gnawing and vexing the Traytor as once h Gen. 4.13 Cain and most murtherers he having in this perplexitie reference to Boniface the Bishop of Rome as i Math. 17.1.2 Iudas had to the Pharisees after hee betrayed Christ as to his spirituall physitian and being superficially baulmde and his wound skind over by this Quak-salver he in requitall gave him what the Devill tempted Christ with and what hee most gaped after worldly k Math. 4.8.9 honours and glories even this glorious Title of Vniversall Bishop of the whole world his Diocesses extending as farre as the Devills Thus crept he first out of his shell in which he had beene long inclosed the mysterie of iniquitie being long a working by degrees l Vide Morneū de progressu Papalus in folio commencing and sitting in the Chayre of pestilence But in Davids time and in the time of the Patriarks Prophets Apostles yea and the first sixe hundred yeares after called the Primitive times as we m Bishop Iewell his challenge in his apology for the Church of England offer the triall a man might as soone have seene a mil-stone fly in the ayre as eyther Pope or point of Poperie as now it stands for all their vociferations and false lap-wings cries of their Old Religion Old law Mother Church and I know not what Nay David here askes not leave eyther of Gad or Nathan or Abiathar or Zadok though hee were now Gods high Priest for the institution of this solemnitie and for the Congregating of Israel to performe these gratulatorie sacrifices and oblations in my Text. David knew hee was sui iuris free of himselfe and stood on his owne legges and that in all things that hee lawfully commanded in God and for God which limits indeed both the power of Princes and the obedience of subjects n August serm 6. de verbis dom epist. 666. in Psal 124. Basil reg 7. ex Brev 114. 202. 204. in Decreto 11.9 ch 92.93.94.95 habetur ex patribus restitere ergo illicitis Magistratuū mandatis Daniel tres puers Dan. 3.19 Ambrosius Theodosio Christianus quidam Iuliano apud Theodor. l 3. cap. 22. active though not passive as the learned discusse and determine Nathan and Zadok were to be obedient and subordinate to him not hee to them which had beene a grosse confusion and a historen proteron in Theologicall rhetorick Indeed David consults o Sam. 7.2.3 with Nathan about building the Temple as Saul and p 1 Sam. 14.8 Samuel about sacrifizing and indeed it 's an excellent harmonie and the most Lidian consort to see a Moses an q Exod. 4.14 5.1 Aron a Iehoash and a r 2. King 12.2 Iehoiada a David and a ſ 1. King 2.32 Nathan a Baruck and a t Iudg. 4.8 5 1. Deborah a Iosias and a u 2. Reg 22.14 Huldah a Salomon * 1. Chron. 29 22 and a Zadok an Ezekiah and an x Esa 7.21 Esay a Nehemiah and an y Nehem. 8 9. Ezra an Ambrose and a Theodosius the Word and the Sword Magistracie and Ministrie the Prince and the Prophet consult together as his Majestie at this day as in the high Court of Parliament occasionedly since with his Lords Spirituall aswell as Temporall about even matters Ecclesiasticall as Politicall about building or repayring or purging or perfecting Gods spirituall Tēple establishing ratifying rectifying his true and sincere worship And if this liberty were not given to Christian Princes to consult with their Clergie that are made of their privie Councell they should be straighter tyed then the very heathenish Romanists that usually advised with their Augurists and Flamins and the Persians Chaldeans that advised with their * Apud Cellium Rhodiginum Aulum Gellium
that true aqua vitae the waters of life the promises of grace made to the i Esay 55.1 Matth. 5.6 thirstie It s more mercie as the object is more excellent to comfort a sicke soule as Christ did sorrowing k Ioh. 21 15 16 Peter weeping l Luke 7.50 Mary Magdalen Paul the penitent m 2. Cor. 2.6 7. Corinthian Ananiaes humbled n Acts 9.17 Paul Peter the heart-pricked o Act. 2.37 38. Iewes Paul and Silas the affrighted and afflicted p Act. 16.30 31 Iaylor then to helpe and heale a sicke bodie Seventhly pray for all men 1. chiefly for Kings and q 1. Tim. 2.2 Rulers as the Iewes did for the Princes of Chaldea in their captivitie Ier. 20. the primitive Christians for the Emperours 2. for Ministers and Preachers as the Churches of Colossia Thessalonica Rome Corinth r Rom 15. ●0 Coloss 4.3 1. Thess 5.25 2. Thess 3.1 others did for Paul 3. for thy wife children as Zachary for his ſ Luke 1.13 Elizabeth Isaac for his t Gen. 25.21 Rebeccha Abraham for his u Gen. 17.18 18.23 Ismael David for his sick * 2. Sam. 12.16 childe 4. for thy houshold servants as the Cēturion for his Matth 8.5 and Abraham for his x Gen. 24. Steward for thy enemies and persecutors as Stephen for those that stoned a Acts 7.60 him Christ for those that crucified b Luke 23.3 him Samuel for those that rejected c 1. Sam. 12.19 him Moses for d Exod. 8. so for rebelling Israel Numb 16 22. for Miriam Numb 12.13 Pharaoh that opposed and hated him lastly for all men even Iewes Turkes and Pagans except for those that sinne unto e 1. Iohn 5.16 death as did Iudas f See D. Deuisons Sermon of the sin against the holy Ghost Iulian and the wilfull malicious * Marke 3.28 Pharisees yea for our enemies as is a Matth. 5.44 Luke 6.28 Rom. 12.14 1. Pet. 3.9 commanded and hath beene g Gen. 20.17 Num. 16.22 21.8 1. Reg. 13.6 Psal 109.4 Ier. 11.13 19. 1. Cor. 4.12 Exemplo Mosis Davidi● Ieremiae Pauli c. practised Lastly you must submit your selves even to performe these dueties morall and politicall that are prescribed you Masters to servants servants to masters Husbands to wives wives to husbands Parents to children children to parents Magistrates to subjects subjects to magistrates paying scott and lott taxes and subsidies homage and honour tribute to whom tribute belongeth All which because they are very manie and numerous in their particulars I referre you to such as have generally intreated of them onely in all these speciall and specificall duties I enjoine your submissive obedience this day As Davids people yeelded themselves to one so doe you to one and every one of them To day if you will heare the Lords voyce harden not your hearts as in the h Heb. 3.15 provocation Be not clay lest you be crusht asunder but melting waxe taking the seale and impression of grace draw like silver threeds in the furnace bow your neckes to God take on you the yoake of i Matth. 11.29 Christ that is easie and his burthen which is light which wee as his mouth and messengers impose upon you If you consent and obey you that are here planted shall eate the good things of the k Esay 1.19 land but if you refuse rebell you shall be devoured by the sword or famine or other plagues for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it you shall be spewed out and disgorged as the * Iudg. 1. 2. c. Cananites and wiped as a man wipeth a dish turning it topsi-turvie upside downe I set life and death before you this day chuse life l Deut. 30.19 chuse whether you will be Oakes stubbornly resisting God and his ordinances in the Magistracie and Ministrie as did the m Ier. 3.15 18.12 1. Sam. 8.19 Iewes or Reedes bowing bending flexible docible obedient to whatever the Lord in and by us shall enjoyne you as this people were here unto David Knowing that the despising and resisting of us is the despising yea despiting of God n Luke 10.16 1. Thess 4.8 himselfe as the contempt of Ezekiahs o 2. Chr. 30.10 Posts and of Davids Embassadors were p 2. Sam. 10.6 revenged as the contempt of these two Kings SECT IV. Obedience Civill Ecclesiasticall Theologicall the life and soule of Religion OH let us know that as disobedience is as the sinne of witchcraft yea plaine treason and rebellion against the q 1. Sam. 15.25 Lord so obedience is the very life and genius and soule of Religion 1. If a weeping eye did speake a man religious then r Heb. 12.16 Esau Israel at her worst had teares at ſ Deut. 1.43 44. command like the t Vincentius ex Physiologo nat hist. ii 17. c. 606. Crocodile or u De Astuia Hyena lachrymantu lege Arist lib. 8. c. 5. Vincent lib. 19. c. 61. Aelian l. 6. c. 13. Hyena even when bloodshed and fratricide was hatched in the heart of the one and flat rebellion purposed in the heart practised by the hand of the other 2. If a hearing eare did speake and proclaime a religious man we have Herod hearing * Mark 6.20.28 Iohn yet beheaded Iohn hearing him as a Saint living still in his lust as a beast butchering the Baptist as a Divell we have the Scribes the Pharisees Iohns auditors yet a generation of x Matth. 3.9 Vipers 3. If a confessing tongue did alwayes demonstrate a religious heart we have Cain bellowing out his y Gen. 3.13 murther Iudas roaring out his own treason z Matt. 27.3 in the languishing anguish of their soules Saul himselfe with much adoe bleating out I have a 1. Sam. 15.23.24 sinned yet the first branded for a b 1 Ioh. 3.12 Reprobate c Gen. 4 12. Runnagate the second for the sonne of d Ioh. 17 12. 6.70 perdition the third for a man ejected rejected of e 1. Sam. 15.26 28. God vexed by f 1. Sam. 16.14 Sathan in all probabilitie as certainly damned as Salomon was g De salute Saelonionis l●gatur Soto maior praef in Cantic Lorinus in Eccl. c. 1. allegantes Patres argumenta producentes saved though some Scepticques question both the one and the h Praecipue Bellarm. confut á Zanchio de preservatione Sanctorum nostrum Will●tt in fine Synopsis Papismi other as if they would finde a knot in a * 2. Sam. 7.13 Bul-rush 4. If praying did alwayes prognosticate piety we have the Pharisee i Luke 18.10 prayers preying upon the poor under pretext of Fasting and prayer devouring widdowes houses we have the worst of the Iewes like evening Wolves in their extremities howling upon their bedds yea the proudest Pharisee that ever shewed to the Lord all
and distractions of families incumbrances from your callings and what other lets disturbance impediments and remoraes whatsoever which doe everie way in this your warfare here imbondage and inthrall you from the performance of this or any other spirituall duetie in that measure and perfect manner that you would or should of which you daily complaine with the h Rom. 7.23 Apostle and all the faithfull and against which you daily strive and fight in the Christian conflict and bickering i Gal. 5. v. 17. duell betwixt grace and nature the flesh and the spirit Oh let it be your living dying yet never dying comfort that you that begin cordially and Christianly to blesse God here after this short life is ended which is as brittle as k Esai 40 6. 1. Pet. 1.24 glasse as wavering as the winde as frayle as the Ice as swift as a poaste or a weavers shittle as melting as snow as fading as smoake or the fields flower as vanishing as a dreame you shall joyne your spirits to the spirits of the just to sing and ring forth your everlasting Hosannahes and Haleluiahs to the God of spirits for which end as Pauls wish and hearts desire was that Israell might be l Rom. 10.1 saved so my wish and hearts desire is that all of you might here be so farre sanctified that innitiated in this life as prentices to this heavenly science or as journey-men or journing men even strangers and pilgrimes with m 1. Chr. 39.15 David the Patriarkes and n Hebr. 11.13 1. Pet. 2.11 Prophets travelling and peregrinating in this vaile of miserie in your few evill o Genes 47.9 dayes ere you sleepe with your p 1. King 2.10 fathers you would so learne to speake the language of Canaan with the tongues and Tones of Angels that at the last as free Denizens free Citizens infranchized and priviledged in all the liberties of grace and glorie you may keepe a perpetuall Iubilee an everlasting Sabbath of prayses and holy expressions in that heavenly Canaan celestiall Ierusalem Mount Sion which is q Gal. 4.26 above to which my hopes be that you are my desires be that you may be travelling breathing and aspiring SECT II. Motives further urging here to begin the l●fe of Grace after of Glorie OH suffer the word of exhortation I beseech you as heavenly Quyristers begin even here even now even this day the Quyre on earth It 's not thanke worth to be eternally thankefull in heaven you must doe it you can doe no otherwayes if you once come there It 's as naturall if I may use that word for the blessed spirits to blesse and prayse the Lord as for the fire to burne the Sunne to shine the waters to move the Seas to ebbe and flow r Aelian hist li. 10. c. 44. Plin. li. 5. cap. 9. Nilus to overflow or any other creatures celestiall or sublunary animate or inanimate to move and worke and produce effects according to their natures and severall proprieties But to prayse God here joyfully cordially constantly to breake here through all impediments as Davids three worthies through the Garryson of the Philistines to fetch the desired waters of ſ 1. Chr. 11. vers 18. Bethlem to strive here against all discouragements as in the Olympicke t De his ludis multa apud Celium Rhodignū historicos Poetas sunt quos curriculo pulverem Olympicum collegisse iuvat c. Horat. games for Masteries to swim against the streame of all oppositions as is said of the u Arist anim lib. 9. cap 48. Dolphin and Samon to be resolute against all repugnances of the false and flattering flesh that bids the spirit as Peter bade Christ favour it selfe The tempting Devill the persecuting world who by the imputations of hypocrisie humorousnesse fantasticalitie singularitie at least of Puritanisme and Precisnesse seeke to quench in every zealist all sparkes of Devotion as soone as ever kindled yea as w Math. 2.16 Herod and x Exod. 1.22 Pharaoh to drowne murther even Christ and Christianitie in all the Israell of God as soone as ever new borne I say those that can thus digest all those bitter pilles as physicall and can be as was Davids y 2. Sa. 6.21.22 case with Micholl more zealous in this and all other duties the more they are opposed like the fire that burnes the more the more it is z Quo magis premitur eo magis astuat ignis supprest this indeede is prayse worthy everie inferior birde can chippe and croude it in the spring and can sing in the Sunne shine that is a birde indeede that can sing in the storme and charoll it in the Winter every fish can play in the calme the Dolphin and some moe can play in the tempest everie man can blesse God in the Sunne-shine of his prosperitie with full bagges full barnes full bellies and clothed backe But to blesse God in adversitie in the stormes of affliction with Iob on the a Job 1. v. 21. dunghill Daniel in the Lions b Dan. 6.21.22 den with the three companions of c Dan. 3.23 Daniels in the furnace with the Martyres at the d Many had that strength grace given them in the paganish Arrian popish persecution nominated in the Martyrologie but chiefly by him who hath epitomized all the booke of Martyres fol. 3.4.5.6 7.8.9.10 to fol. 18. c. stake to sing songs of Sion here in a strang land this is that which is most acceptable to the Almightie Oh then that my words might prick and fasten like the goades and nayles of the sanctuarie that I might plead and prevaile with you Even now with Noahs e Genes 7.9 Dove to enter into the Arke to leave the carrion and fleshly lusts of the world on which the worlds Crowes Dogs and Vultures prey and glutt themselves here to be at rest in God and on God Oh let my counsell be f Dan. 4.24 acceptable here strive to enter into the Bride-grome g Math 25.10 chamber to rejoyce as Paranymphs and friends of the h Math. 9 15. bridegrome to sing with Salomon a divine Epithalamium in honour of the spirituall espousals betwixt Christ and his Church Oh that you could here sleepe in quiet rest and tranquilitie of the soule in heavenly contemplations as that Endimion is said to have slept with the i Apud Natalem Comitem in Methiologijs Moone in the phylosophicall speculations here be conversant in the mount with God as k Exod. 19.3 Moses get a glimpse of the glorie of Christ in the mount with Peter Iames l Math. 17.4.5 2. Pet. 1.17 Iohn for in the mount of high and heavenly thoughts and meditations God will bee seene Christ will bee found in m Luk. 2.46 Ierusalem which is the vision of n Visio Paci● peace Oh that we could ascend up from earth to heaven with
recreation as the Spaniell the waters for our turnes and times for a time for meere necessitie and conveniencie not giving it our hearts nor affections shaking it of when we have done with it for h Seeking only quae ad vict●● cultumque necessaria Cicero meate drinke and clothes and imbracing in the inwards of our soules more pure spirituall contentive and satisfactorie delights and desires Oh be as much as thou canst in the mount of spirituall speculation rather then in the vallie of externall actions rather in the lightsome i Gen. 46.34 Exod. 10. ver 23 Goshen with Gods Israell then in the darkesome Egypt with the uncircumcised rather suffer affliction as Moses with Gods k Heb. 11.24.25 people then injoy the pleasures of sinne for a season rather desire with David to be a doore keeper in Gods house then to live in the Tents of Kedar as Lot in l Genes 19. 2. Pet. 2.7 Sodom Ezekiah amongst m Ezek. 2. ver 6 Scorpions rather fast with Gods children the mourners in Sion as Esther with her n Esther 4.16 maydes Mordocheus with the distressed Iewes o Ezra 10. v. 1.2 Ezra p Dan. 10. v. 2.3 Daniel and q Nehem. 1. v. 4 Nehemiah then feast with the profane Balthezars and drunken Nabals of the world rather sing songs of Sion with Moses Deborah Miriam Zachary the two Annas and the spirituall Israell of God to the laude and praise of God then songs of Sodom to the Lute and Tabret and Harpe to the dishonour of God with that carnall r Amos 6.6 Esay 22. vers 13 Israell Avoyd the companie of the wicked fly from their societie as Manes the Calcedon Bishop did from Iulian the Apostate Iohn from Cerinthus Origen from Paulus Samesetenus Polycarpus from Marcion Athanasius Chrysostome and the ſ Of all these there is ample mention made by Socrates Eusebius the Germaine Centuries c. As I have alledged them already in my Origens repentance Orthodoxes Alexandrians and Antiochians from the blaspemous Arrians as from a dogge a t Cane poenis angue adagium snake and a devill Come no neerer them then to the plague who have hot mouths like Armenian Dragons hot as Ovens with fire from hell spitting burning venomous sparkes of blasphemies in the face of Heaven For to converse with such is to have our Hell on earth but to praise God with the Saints yea withall the creatures magnifie him in all his glorious attributes this is to have heaven on u Vita celitum vita caelestis earth Oh happie as holy is that soule who in imitation of the Larke and the singing Quyristers of the Ayre hath his chiefe delight to be mounting upwards and singing above as neere to God as he can get and useth this grosser earth but onely for foode and meere necessaries making no stay below till it soare up againe that it be intrapped as these incautelous birdes in the lime-twigs of lustes in the gins of temptations Oh happie he that not contented with ordinarie duties with our common Protestants materially and cursorily performed such as their stinted tasks of saying rather then praying Prayers reading of Chapters singing of a Psalme saying Grace before and after meate as they use to say by themselves or children their atturneys running daily in these unlesse by carnalite or profanesse omitted as in a Laborynth or Circle like a Milne-horse ever in one pace without ever quickening their motion what extraordinarie occasion soever come eyther of prayer in humiliation or praysing God in true Gratulation those that besides these ordinaries can sequestrate times to dedicate and consecrate their very soules and spirits to the very God of spirits extraordinarily in manner and measure as occasion is offered eyther of mourning such as was in the dayes of w Esay 22. v. 13. Esau x Osee 6 v. 1.2 Osee y Dan. 9. v. 1.2.3.4.5 Daniel z Ioel. 1. v. 5.8.11.13 cha 2.15.16.17 Ioel a Ezra 10.3.5 Ezra b 1. Sam. 1.10 Anna c Iob. 3.24 Iob d Ierem. 9. v. 1.2 Ieremie or of rejoysing such as in the dayes of David both herein my Text and elsewhere when David penned his Eucharisticall Psalmes sung publickly in the Church he and the Elders of Israell as also in the dayes of his sonne Salomon Ezekiah and Iosiah after him exulting and triumphing before the Lord. Oh happie he that can marry as some Fathers besides e Stella Bona ventura in Lucam Fryers have alluded both Martha and f Luke 10. vers 41.42 Mary Rachell and Leah can unite and so conjoyne the fruitefull thoo-bleare eyed life of action as lesse faire with the more beauteous life of contemplation that in his generall calling as he is a Christian can make holy and spirituall duties the unbending of his bow sauce to his meate his verie recreation and best preparing to the duties of his speciall and particular calling as he is a man such a man is indeede a Phoenix amongst men Rara avis in terris as the Hevites said of g Gen. 23. v. 6. Abraham even a Prince of God amongst men yea he that can be a regular observant of these few rules by blessing the Lord with his heart and mouth the members of his bodie and faculties of his soule here in grace shall inchoate and begin even in the vallie of the world in the vaile of his flesh the life of glorie such an one shall attaine to more Evangelicall perfection then ever did Iew Papist or Pelagian in the meere observation of Moses his Legals whether Morals Cerimonials or Iudicials Yea by these rules he shall come neerer God shoote neerer heaven walke more in the light of the Sunne as every way more perfect Yea I say further he shall inherit and injoy sweeter extasies of soule raptures of spirit comforts of conscience peace of heart joy in the holy Ghost then ever any superstitious popeling regular Fryer or Monasterian in this earth had notwithstanding all their Thrasonicall bragges and boasts to the contrary of ther feined revelations apparitions and enthusiasmes by their strictest observance of the rules of their Saint Francis Benedict Dominick c. or these that are forged and fathered on Basill h De regulis Francisci Basilij Augustini c. vide Fusius apud Hospinianum de origina Monocatus Augustine or any other recorded by i Vide Cassiani collationes Suriū Lippomanum Pomerium de sanctis Marulum Abdiam Gregorium in dialogis Cassianus and their owne writers Oh could we trie how good and gracious the Lord is had we but a spirituall gust of the comforts of grace If wee did but once eate the spirituall Manna that 's hid from the world Could wee turne the bread of life in succum sanguinem into bloud and moysture Could wee be weaned from the world to be fed as children truely newly k 1.
and Eutichius Bernard Peter of Clunes yea amongst the chiefe Bishops of Asia about the celebration of Easter as appears in Ecclesiasticall histor Yea how ever it is excused by Chrys hom 6. de laudibus Pauli by other fathers Paul and Barnabas dissēted Act. 16.37 Margine Yet since wee all hold the foundation against Papist and Pelagian and Armenian and who ever else which is justification freely by faith in Christ without the workes of the law according to the Scriptures thus building on the rock though there may be amongst us doctrinall or personall errors we are still a Church wee have not totally and apostatically revolted as the Iewes Eightly and yet see still a further mercie to us then to these Iewes though Gods owne peculiar people as indeede as when by a stone throwne in the waters one circle begets another and as in a golden chaine one lincke succeedes exceeds another so in the cordes of a man in the cordes of g Osee 11.4 love one mercie drawes another though our provocations and rebellions haue every way equalized theirs and though in paternall love by fatherly castigations corrections the Lord hath visited our sinnes with roddes our offences with scourges as he threatned h 2. Sam. 7.14 Salomon as he hath dealt with i 2. Sa. 12.10.11 David k 2. Chr. 32 25 26. Ezekiah l Ionas 1.3.4 Ionas and all his transgressing children yet he hath not beene so strict and severe with us as with them for manie ages and generations to scourge us with any Ashur or Assirian any rod of his m Esay 10.5 wrath any forreine power For how ever in our first planting in this Island we have been subjugated and subdued very n See Lanquets Chronicle lib. 2 per totum de Gestis Romanorum in Anglia libr. 3. per totum ●t testatur pag. 136. often by the Pictes by the Danes by the Romanes and since the time of William the Conqueror as appeares in the raignes of severall Kings wee have had bloudie bickerings with neighbouring Kingdomes chiefly the Normans the French and the Scottes now our brethren our neerest and deerest Allies they and we meeting in his Royall Majestie as in the Royall center of love as the Tyrians and the Syrians in one Aeneas and how ever in the Raignes of everie King our Edwards Richards Iohns Henries and the rest since as before the Conquest our land hath beene shaken as with a feaver rent and devided as with the teeth and fangs of madd dogges in Civill warres more or lesse by the factions and rebellions of turbulent malignant humerous proud ambitious and discontented spirits Yet within our memorie or the memorie of our forefathers our great grand-fathers which is a singular mercie both to us their successors and our predecessors wee have not beene brought under any forreine power no externall yoke hath beene layd on our neckes excepting the Romane yoke on the soules of our forefathers as the o Exod. 1.13 Egyptian Chaldean p Esay 10.6 Ierem. 50.33 Assirian q Ierem. 51.34 Babylonian yoke was layd upon the Iewes for many yeares together in grievous pressures wee have not beene subdued in our times by anie forreine enemie as the Israelites were kept under sometimes r Iudg. 3.8.14 twentie sometimes thirtie fortie yeares by the Midianites Moabites Ammonites Philistines and other enemies which the Lord stirred up against them Our land in our time as was once sayd of Venice is a Virgin unconquered unsubdued We have obtained ſ 2. Sam. 24.14 Davids desire to fall into the hands of God by plague and famine and other afflictions but not into the hands of man as Sampson did to be mocked of the t Iudg. 16.21.25 1. Sam. 31.4 uncircumcised which was Sauls feare as Abimelech was ashamed to die by the hand of a w Iudg. 9.54 woman quod omen avertat Deus Lastly which is the summe and substance shutting up of all the rest comparing our selves still with them not onely in positive mercies but in privative in respect of our evills of x Malum culpa malum poena sinnes and evils of sufferings wee shall finde though as hath beene said and proved that our provocations are as many as monstrous our demerits as great as theirs all circumstances considered wee having walked as unworthie of Gods mercies as euer they that the Lord hath beene to us in respect of them a mercifull and indulgent father and to them in respect of us a just a severe and unplacable judge to us a father of mercies to them a Iealous and zealous God visiting the sinnes of their fathers upon the Children unto the third and fourth y Exod. 20.5 Generation When I consider not onely the judgements of God upon their soules even to this day in giving them over according to his z Deut. 28.28 threate to madnesse blindnesse of minde astonishment of heart to grope as at noone day their hearts being made fatt their eares heavie their eyes a Esay 6.10 shut least they should see with their eyes heare with their eares and understand with their hearts and convert and be healed God giving them over to the spirit of slumber their eyes being darkened the vayle b 2. Cor. 3.15 unremoved blindnesse in part hapning to c Rom. 11.8 ve 25. v. 9. v 32. them untill the fulnesse of the Gentiles be come in their Table being made a snare and a trap and a stumbling blocke and recompence unto them God shutting them up so farre in unbelife that when their Messias came amongst them as his owne his owne received him d Iohn 1.12 not but crucified the Lord of e Act. 2.36 glorie rejecting him that came in his fathers name their promised Shiloh but receiving to their inevitable ruine and destruction both of bodie and soule imposters and deceivers for their Messias as Herod entertained of his f Some thinke the Herodians were so called in that they thought Herod that Idumean the Messias Herodians two Bens or Barcosbas the sonnes of lying as their owne writers g Sanhedrim li. c. Helech Rabb Moses Ben. Maimon That place of Haggai c. 2 7.8 being applied to the one by Rab Akiba tract Meghala Iacobs scarre Num 23. unto the other Talmud Ieros L. Taanith testifie being received even of their great Rabbyns and the propheticall Scriptures applied unto them the one immediately after the Passion of Christ the other in the dayes of Adrian besides that Egyptian Moses that Devill in the shape of a h Socrat. eccles hist. libr 7. c. 37. man who drowned so manie of them in the Sea in the Isle of i Anno 434. Creete with other birds of that blacke feather as that Pseudo-Moses in k Nicephorus Arabia with others moe Thus as our Papists and other heretickes at this day not beleeving the truth the Lord giving them over to strong
chiefly as some histories instance for their sanguinolent devilish malignant disposition in using to crucifie some children as upon our good friday still in derision of our Messias when I see how all nations are weary of thē as a tender stomack of unholsom meate ready to disgorge thē how as th'Apostle speaks of thē even to this day God they please not and are contrarie to all men 1. Thes 2 15. How as is said of o Gen. 16. v. 12. Ismael like Ismalits rather then Israelits their hand is against every man everie mans against thē how even the Turkes detest thē above any nation for killing their own Prophet Christ the best Prophet they say that ever was excepting Mahomet will not admit any amongst them except he first turne Christian and then a Turkish Renegado In their reproach also using a kinde of imprecation if this be not true would God I might die a p M. Purchase in his pilgrimage Iew as our perverse Irish use a worse when I doe such or such a thing I le turne Protestant and goe to Church I say laying to heart and desiring all and everie of us to lay to heart these premisses this strict and severe though just and legall proceeding of God with these his owne people in these specified particulars together with his multiplied accumulated renued mercies to us in giving us so many blessings forgiving or forbearing us still after all our rebellions and provocations by which even wee racke and stretch his patience as cloath on the tentor hookes not cutting us off as hee might doe and hath done them roote bough and branch but giving us a large space of repentance as hee did to q All the time that ●o● lived amongst them Sodom to the old r All the time the Arke was in building world to ſ Revel 2.19 Iezabell not fortie dayes as to t Ionas 3. Ninive but fortie yeares in the pure and powerfull preaching of the Gospell under a gracious Deborah and more then twentie yeares added since under so wise and worthie a King all this while manuring and managing and pruning us as once his Israelitish u Esay 5. vers 1.2 3.4.5 Vineyeard hedging us in and invironing us with so many mercies of adornation and preservation as would stretch Arithmeticke to number them and Geometrie to measure them making us as famous over the whole world as they are infamous us as much feared as was Ioshuah of the Cananites Alexander of the Indians Taubut of the French w A Drumme was made of his skin to terrifie his enemies when hee was dead teste ●ran●zio in Vādalia libr. 11. cap. 9. Maiol colloq 7. pag. 270 Et Akiat● in Emblem sic c●te detracta Ziseas c. Zoenus potuit vincere Pontifices Zisca of the Popish amongst the Bohemians Constantine amongst the Pagans and Bellisarius and Narses amongst the Gothes and Vandals yea as much loved and admired of our friendes and confederates and awefully feared of our enemies as they all are of all hated and detested with an Anathema Maranatha till the vayle be removed that they love and receive yea beleeve in the Lords Christ their expected Saviour Yea when I consider how the Lord by the word preached by the inward motions and suggestions of his spirit which sometimes in some flashes knockes at the doore of the heart of a x Numb 23.10 Balaam a carnall y Ioh. 6.34 Iohn 7.46 Iew a z Iohn 4.15 Samaritane a a Pilate Math. 27.23.24 Iohn 18.38 Heathen an b Act. 26.28 Agrippa by crosses by afflictions which wrought on c 2. Chron. 33.10.11 Manasses and the Gospels d Luk. 15.16.17 prodigall yea sometimes on these Iewes e Hos●● 6. v. 1.2 themselves by fatherly castigations and corrections paternall admonitions and expostulations legall Cominations and redargutions Evangelicall promises and consolations yea even by mercies and judgements nay even by signes and wonders from the earth from the heavens from the ayre by Comets blazing starres visions and apparitions as often to these Iewes before their f See the book extant called Doome forewarning to judgement where at large is recited the voice commanmanding some to goe to Pella the crying of one Iesus woe woe to Ierusalem with manie visions and wonders destruction as prodigious and prognosticating as anie recorded by g Texter in Officina de Miraculis Textor or h Lycosthenes hath write a great booke onely de Prodigijs Lycosthenes How I say by all these the Lord hath lured us unto him laboured to weane us from our sinnes as the childe from the desired dugge that iniquitie bee not our i Ezek. 18.30 destruction as it was to these Iewes c. when I see hee hath rowled everie stone touched everie string used all meanes for our conversion to prevent our confusion chiefly drawne us with the cordes of love using to us the rod of beautie as our indulgent Shepheard to them the rod of bands making us above any Nation in the World patternes and presidents of his mercie as they of his justice to present times and to all posteritie making them exemplarie markes of justice to us not us to them as our sinnes deserved I say thus comparing mercies and judgements together as white with blacke as the Heathens Venus with Vulcan our mercies this day ballanced and poy●ed with their miseries have such a luster that if we see them not wee are blinde if with David and his people we blesse not the Lord for them wee are as much past grace as past gratitude CHAP. XIIII Speciall deliverances of our Princes Peeres and people from Romish Treasons THus have wee opened the Boxe and seene the pearles the blessings of great Brittaine comparing Nation with Nation our English with the Iewish Sion but to come neerer still to my scope and ayme and to instance in moe specialties the priviledges and prerogatives that wee have had even in our owne memories to omit former times equall with the Iewes in the happie and prosperous Regiments of our Kings and Governours may notably serve as a further pricke and goade to true gratitude so pressed and prescribed for in some particulars wee shall have the ballancing if not the casting scales I cannot enumerate all as hee that comes into a garden pluckes not everie flower but some choyce ones compare our late Deborah our mother in Israell Queene Elizabeth of famous memorie with their David our present Liege Soveraigne with their Salomon not onely in the propagation and continuation of true Religion together with the two goodly Daughters of so gracious a Mother Peace and k Religio peperit divitias ast filia devoravit matrē Plentie in which wee sympathize with them nay farre exceede them for as our times have not beene so turbulent so truculent so bloudie and boysterous as Davids that was a man of warre and shed much bloud as hee
Basil in Psal 33. Epiphan Mer. 51. Chrys ho. 3. ad c. 1. ad Coloss Cyril lib. 4. contra Iul. Procopius cum cateris grounding on Gen. 48.16 on Math. 18. vers 10. and on Act. 12.11.15 Prince have his bonus Genius his protecting Angel both by land and sea in every coast countrey where he came having reduced brought him backe again after this large circumference to the English Court his own center in health honour prosperitie and safetie both in bodie and soule not somuch as the least infected dust cleaving to his feete much lesse any corrupted Popish ayre infect his royall bloud such was the antydote preservative of grace of which his highnesse hath given more then Mathematicall demonstration even since his comming home Oh this is a mercie to his highnesse in particular to the land realme all us in generall interested in him past expression Chiefly whē I consider how unworthy we have walked of former mercies how like these nine clensed lepers we have beene b Luk. 17.16.17 unthankefull how there is at this day a controversie whether God is more mercifull to us or wee more sinfull against him we wounding the Lord with his own weapons abusing our peace plentie all other Tallents as Bawdes Panders to uncleanesse as fuell to the fire of our licentiousnesse as if a whorish woman should with these Iewels love tokens she receives from her husband mantaines an adulterous lover or a favorite with these lands revenues he hath received from his Prince assist animate a professed rebell wee imploying still Gods favours in the service of sinne sathan our sinnes like Ierusalems yea like c Ezeth 16.49 Sodoms pride idlenesse fulnesse of bread yea fulnesse foulnesse of drinke too extortion oppression increasing and springing with our blessings the sins of every countrey the German drunknesse Asian luxurie Cretian lying Carthaginian perfidiousnesse Italian wantonnesse Iewish usurie Turkish crueltie the French complementall formality with the vices vanities of every other Nation meeting in our land as in their Center entertained retained as Lawyers their Clients Physitians their Patients Noble-men their jeasters fooles because they bring sackes to our Milnes pleasures to our mindes or profites to our purse c. Yea withall when I ponder too how little use we have made of the Lords judgements plagues pestilence dearths inundations of waters sicknesses diseases deaths of the Honourable of the Martiall of the Senatour of the d Esai 3.1.2.3 Counsellour that have beene taken from us but chiefly the eclypsing of that bright sun that once shined so gloriously in our hemispher th' death of that our Illustrious farre famoused Prince Henry as greivous to our hearts as the death of that worthie e By the malice of Roxama cut off by his bloudy father Solyman in any great thing that happens the proverbe is Mustapha is dead Mustapha was once to his Martiall Ienisaries or the death of that noble Zisca to his zealous valerous Bohemians of whose death in not dying since to any sinne as humbled by this judgement we have made so little use that by our greivous provocations and as a just punishment of our former ungratious ingratitudes in the absence of our Prince the Lord having lately the Ball at his foote as hee hath ever to goale it to our griefe whereas hee might have brought on us now stouping plague indeede and have payed us home once for all by many meanes which I leave to all Christian hearts to excogitate yet when wee experimentally see that as in the first creation hee hath brought light out of darkenesse good out of our feared evill glory to himselfe prayses to his Majestie as before prayers for the preservation of our thrice honoured Prince Is not all this the Lords doings and it is marvailous in our eyes Oh if David and his Nobles were thankefull for the mercies towards their Salomon the instrumentall builder of their materiall let us be thankefull for our Salomon the builder of the spirituall Temple the propagator and continuer of true Religion the planter of Gods true worship the supplanter of Idolatrie If Cain bee avenged seven times then Lamech seventie times said that f Genes 4.24 Polygamist If the Iewes have cause of gratulation seaven times for Gods mercies towards their Church and Common-wealth Kings and people wee have occasion seventie times seven times If the undersong of Davids Psalmes much more of our spirituall Hymnes may well runne in this torrent to the God of mercies for his mercie endureth for g Psal 136. per totum ever Oh then let all of us this day this houre with our mother great Britaine by all meanes expresse our thankfulnesse by our rejoycings in the outward and inward man Blow with your Trumpets as in the new Moone strike your Drummes advance your pikes I wish I could say as in England ring your Bells make your bonfires sound your Cornets display your Banners charge and discharge your Guns apply your powder make good use of Match or as more certaine use your fire lockes march like Martialists daunce your measures as David did before the Arke Let the day of our preservation from the powder treason of the Coronation of our King the reduction of the Prince be to us as the Iewes h ●●●h 9.26 Purim let them be writ in red Letters inserted in our Calender but for ever these mercies with their memorials let them be as Moses commands i Deut. 6.6.7.8 Israell be ingraven better then in Brasse and Marble in the Tablets of our gratefull hearts perpetuated traditionarily to our Children children Let our Hearts Lives Loves Votes Voyces Tongues Soules Spirits joyne with all the blessed Quyre of Angels in Heaven and Saints in Earth for all his mercies to praise the father of mercies the God of spirits To whom bee honour and glorie of us and in all Churches for ever and ever Amen FINIS ERRATA Sic Correcta 1. Iaunnus for Janus pag. 9. post literam f. 2. optative for operative p. 12. initio pagina 3. God for good ibid. 4. Denuntion for denuntiation initio pag 20.5 Farnestius for Far●●sius initio pag. 24. 6. of for oft pag. 43. Sect. 6. lit c pag. 46. in fine sect 6. those words must headded post verbum Queene Mary with many moe doe sympath●●e one with another and hang together like burres 7. Zinick for Zurick p. 51. post lit y 8. wafted for wafted p. 53 post lit b 9. Menius for Mevius p. 59 post q 10 pag. ●6 in fine pawne they for they pawne 11 p. 97. prolonging for prolonging post f 12 p. 99 pri●●aces for privaces linea prima 13. p. 104. post u bewitching for butchering 14. p. 106. Zapirus for Zopir●s post f 15. p. 110. mike for milke post w pag. 111. in lit m it is for is it 16 pag. 136. chippe for chirpe post lit z 17 p. 138. initiation for imitation post lit p In the Margino also there be some maine defects which yet with your pen may be cured pag. 25. lit x Bols●ecus for Bolsecus p. 33. lit q Magnetis nigra for Mira pag. 120. lit f adde to intolerable pride deleatur where Caesar make it as Pelargus of the p. 9● lit s Hexapla in Lucadum for in Exodum with sodoe other of lesse moment
the like according to his travails and desires that all those differences divisions contentions betwixt Prelacie and Presbetery in our English Israel about blacke and white and square and round and sitting and kneeling with such ceremonies so hotly controverted by the tongues and pennes of so many zealists on both sides pro contra in our Churches Pulpits Houses and private as sometimes publicke Tables that all this might meete as right drawne lines in one Center of x Read the extant Treatises of our moderate Cassanders as D. Sparkes M. Sprint M. As●aew his brotherly reconcilement peace that as wee agree in doctrine with all reformed Churches notwithstanding all papisticall cavils calumnies to the contrarie so we might agree also in discipline in the circumstances as well as in the substance of Religion not dissenting in the colour forme or fashion shape lace of the garment when wee consent in the choyce goodnesse of the cloath Oh that as we professe confesse one God the father of all one Christ the redeemer of all one * Eph. 4 4.5 Spirit the sanctifier of all the Elect yea one Faith one Baptisme one Hope one Life one way to this life as one Sunne but one Soule in man one y De Phoenice etiamsi multi dubitant asserūt tamen Mela li. 3. cap. 4 Herod li. 2. c. 5. Solin c. 35. Imo describit Ruffinus enpos Symbol Isodor li. 12. c. 7. Aug. ser 18 allegantur etiam quaedam in Concil Aquisg c. 112 113 Phoenix in the world c. so that wee would as one in one minde by one z Psalm 3.16 rule worship this God in a Iohn 4.24 Spirit in truth in unitie in uniformitie of judgement and affections And surely this harmonie I desire to see to heare as earnestly as Augustine desired in his time a Timothy or Paul againe in the b Augustin desired to see Christum in carne Paulum tonitruantem Pulpit to effect with best mentall musicke Oh that those strings what ever they be which are put out of Tune would come up to these that are in Tune yea if I may speake it without offence to God or man as Paul in some cases wisht himselfe cut c Rom 9.3 off and Moses his name blotted out of the booke of d Exod. 32.32 life for the zeale of Israel I wish even my mummiamized earth and dead ashes might quench at last these unnaturall flames and fires in our English Church about these adiaphora these indifferent * Adiaphorists things as they are call'd that like Aetna that Vetruvius the f●ogges smoaks of scandals offences might no more breake out to the choaking smothering of the unsetled ignorant unstable But as was the meditation once of * D. Hall our English Seneca in his meditations quem honoris causa nomino another I feare as the e De mirabili amore Pellicani sanguine proprio pulloi resusscitatis Aelian lib. 15. Vincent libr. 16. cap. 127. Et applicant ad Christum Aug. enarrat in Psal 101. Gregor in Psalm 6. Pellican in love to her young about whose nest the Indian shepheards make fires thinking to quench the flames doth but scorch her owne wings by which shee is taken so in too much intermedling by the scorching tongues of censure I prejudice my selfe without profiting the publike cause Therfore stearing from these rockes I desire to reflect upon this meditation That all are here well affected to God the King all thankefull for mercies all worshippers all sacrificers There was not one notified specified Cham in the Arke not one Iudas amongst these docibles if not Disciples not one at this feast without the wedding * Math. 22.11 garment not a Tobiah and Sanballat that counterfeited their helpe to the Temples * Neh 4.1.2.3 building not a Sheba not an Achitophell not a Popish Kerne not a rebellious spirit amongst them all not a Corab or g Numb 16.12.13 a Dathan in this goodly we may hope godly Congregation despising h Iude vers 8. governement resisting authority not a tongue wagges as in former times We have no parte in the Sonne of i 2. Sam 20.1 Isai shall this man raigne over k 1. Sam. 10.27 us to thy Tents oh Israel not one that preferred a forraine Bramble l Iudges 9.15 before their owne Cedar not a man of them Iesuited but if the oath of allegeance had beene put to them would have subscribed with heart and hand not one Recusant amongst all these that refused in the same religious maner to worship God as his King worshipped not an infected sheepe amongst all this flocke not a string out of Tune in all this musicall * Multitude is eyther an instrument Musicall or that Bellua multorum capitum multitude not a contradicting superstitious Cananite an Idolatrous Egyptian amongst all these Israelites but all of them for as much as man could judge with one heart voice and spirit as the rushing of so many waters as the sound of so many Trumpets as the noyse of so manie Cornets so many Cymbals and loud Cymbals with united spirits as Organs and instruments of Gods glory rightly tuned resonate and resound the prayses of the Almightie Oh that I might be an auditor a spectator of such mentall Musicke in these dayes Many musicall men have writ m Boetius lib. 5. Musices c. 1. Glareamus li. 1. Dodechacordon c. 1. Athan. libr. 14. Dipnos cap. 5. cap. 14. Iulius Pollux libr. 4. Onomast cap. 8. 9.10.11 c. ●elius Rhodig Antiq lect lib 5. cap 23 25.26 Ottom Luscivius libr. 1. Musurgia Plato lib. 3. de Rep diversas numerans Musicae species variaque instrumentorū genera very curiously and exactly of the varieties excellencies and excellent effects of n De admiranda vi Musices cōs●●●e Arist. Iob. 8. polit 5. Plato dial 6. de Legibus Galenum li. 3. cap. 5 de M●pocrate Amatum lib. 2. in Dis or ● 50 Gellium noct Attie lib. 1. cap. 10. Atheneum li. 14. Di●nos c. 11. lib. 1 c. 7. Infistento in Ter●●dro Thaleto pheo Amphion in Cythar Agamemnon Musicke and have distinguished it into Vocall Instrumentall Lidian Doricke Naturall Artificiall Elementary Celestiall Regular Choreall Gregorean Figurall Mensurall disputing about the preheminence of one of these before another most preferring vocall which they call solemnization before instrumentall But for my part as much as I preferre the Soule before the bodie I preferre the musicke of soules and spirit uno animo una voce with one unanimous concord consent rightly tuned in the best key by the finger of the spirit with holy hearts rather thē musicall Harps singing as once the Angels and the Bethelem o Luk 2 14 Shepheards Moses p Exod. 14 Miriam Augustine q They are said to be the Authors of that holy hymne which call Te Deum